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General Discussion >> General Board >> Shoppers Lose Faith In Supermarkets http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?num=1721206920 Message started by whiteknight on Jul 17th, 2024 at 7:02pm |
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Title: Shoppers Lose Faith In Supermarkets Post by whiteknight on Jul 17th, 2024 at 7:02pm
Shoppers lose faith in supermarkets for being too profit-driven :(
Sydney Morning Herald July 17, 2024 Telcos, social media companies and banks have been labelled the least trusted by customers, while the high regard consumers once had for big supermarkets has been tarnished by concerns over soaring grocery prices. As part of a monthly rating for researcher Roy Morgan, consumers score industry sectors and brands on trust, marking them low when they perceive them as being too motivated by profit, charging high prices and being insufficiently focused on customers. Big supermarkets have lost much of the trust they had with the public, but Aldi remains one of the most trusted brands. Rising interest rates and cost-of-living pressures are contributing factors to consumers’ increasing distrust, says Roy Morgan Research chief executive Michele Levine. She says the problems at major companies such as Qantas, Harvey Norman, AMP and Rio Tinto have also contributed to a general loss of consumer trust. Since 2018, Roy Morgan has continuously quizzed more than 2000 people each month on the brands they trust and distrust. Net trust scores are calculated by subtracting distrust from trust. “Before COVID, Australians felt more trusting, however, soaring distrust of executives behaving badly has led to a significant shift in consumer attitudes,” Levine says. Between the 12-month average to December last year and the 12-month average to March this year, the rising distrust of Coles and Woolworths has caused trust in the supermarket sector, as a whole, to drop. Though supermarkets’ overall trust score is still positive, the sector has suffered the biggest drop in the three months. The utility, bank and insurance sectors also fell in the rankings of net trust scores over the same period. The telco sector is the most distrusted of all, closely followed by social media and banking. While consumers mark down supermarkets on trust for being too motivated by profit, they distrust banks even more for being too interested in profit. “With ongoing mortgage rate increases and cost-of-living pressures, Australians are increasingly outraged that banks are making such huge profits at their expense,” Levine says. Big supermarkets are also disliked for price hikes and price gouging, while banks and telcos are regarded by consumers as not being focused enough on them. When it comes to the brands that shoppers trust, Bunnings is the most trusted, followed by Aldi, Kmart, Apple and Toyota. Contrary to the broader trend for the banking sector, the Commonwealth Bank improved its ranking during the three months to be the 16th most-trusted brand. RELATED ARTICLE The Senate Select Committee on Supermarket Prices has released its final report. Supermarket inquiry Supermarket inquiry lays out plan for pricing crackdown Distrust of a brand can persist. Following the Optus data breach in 2022, the telco has been unable to shake off being Australia’s most distrusted brand, Levine says. Medibank, on the other hand, is slowly showing signs of brand recovery after its data breach in 2022. Reputation loss can have an impact on the shareholders of listed companies as well as customers. Following the Medibank data breach, soaring distrust saw close to $2 billion wiped off the health insurer’s market value in a single day. |
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Title: Re: Shoppers Lose Faith In Supermarkets Post by whiteknight on Jul 17th, 2024 at 7:03pm
Stop the price gouging. :(
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Title: Re: Shoppers Lose Faith In Supermarkets Post by greggerypeccary on Jul 17th, 2024 at 8:34pm whiteknight wrote on Jul 17th, 2024 at 7:03pm:
But that's what they're in business for. Their primary goal is taking as much money from customers as possible, not providing them with fresh food. The stuff on the shelves is just a means to an end. The end is profits. Big profits. |
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Title: Re: Shoppers Lose Faith In Supermarkets Post by Baronvonrort on Jul 17th, 2024 at 11:27pm
Harris Farm Markets last week.
The best supermarket in Australia and it's Australian owned. Good price on eye fillet decided to stock up with 4.4 kg eye_fillet_hfm.jpg (222 KB | 15
) |
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Title: Re: Shoppers Lose Faith In Supermarkets Post by JC Denton on Jul 17th, 2024 at 11:32pm
i miss franklins
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Title: Re: Shoppers Lose Faith In Supermarkets Post by aquascoot on Jul 18th, 2024 at 5:25am
keep sending all those profits to germany ,whiteknight
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Title: Re: Shoppers Lose Faith In Supermarkets Post by Gordon on Jul 18th, 2024 at 7:39am Baronvonrort wrote on Jul 17th, 2024 at 11:27pm:
I got same yesterday for $19.99 |
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Title: Re: Shoppers Lose Faith In Supermarkets Post by Gordon on Jul 18th, 2024 at 7:41am
So let's see.
You want these companies to place a shop the size of a football field less than 15m drive from every Australian, stock it with products from across the globe, account for spoilage and theft and not make a profit OK! |
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Title: Re: Shoppers Lose Faith In Supermarkets Post by Sophia on Jul 18th, 2024 at 9:27am whiteknight wrote on Jul 17th, 2024 at 7:03pm:
Totally! They were already making big profits ….. |
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Title: Re: Shoppers Lose Faith In Supermarkets Post by Sophia on Jul 18th, 2024 at 9:33am Baronvonrort wrote on Jul 17th, 2024 at 11:27pm:
Amazing prices! Can’t say I know of any market around here that’s as good as that! Maybe Costco…. but need to buy in bulk, and pay $65 a year membership, and it’s an hour round trip. But I ask, do you know if it’s free range grass fed or grain fed beef? As I’m not big on eating red meat unless I periodically buy from one of the few free range grass fed butchers I’ve located. And of course I’m willing to pay a bit more. |
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Title: Re: Shoppers Lose Faith In Supermarkets Post by greggerypeccary on Jul 18th, 2024 at 11:23am aquascoot wrote on Jul 18th, 2024 at 5:25am:
Aldi says it is subject to the "same taxation rules as other retailers" and "over the past three years, Aldi Australia has paid on average 31 per cent of our pre-tax profits in tax. Furthermore, all profits are reinvested into Aldi Australia's local operation." |
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Title: Re: Shoppers Lose Faith In Supermarkets Post by Laugh till you cry on Jul 18th, 2024 at 1:27pm greggerypeccary wrote on Jul 18th, 2024 at 11:23am:
Aldi is a private company not subject to the same reporting rules as public listed companies which means the truth of their statements about profits and taxes is not easily discovered. The truth is that nobody is being price gouged if there is no collusion between companies because the customer can go to an alternative retailer if he doesn't like the prices he sees at one retailer. I remember 20+ years ago that incandescent 100W lamps were $2 at Bunnings and $0.50 at Woolworths. Was Bunnings price-gouging? |
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